Hurricane Season
Hurricane Season John Hennessy Those red and yellow windbreakers signal how little time's left for spending and selling; signing sleeves unravel the seams of a flattened horizon as fast as hands pull wallets from pockets or unstitch sow's-ear purses. Something sharper than hunger's razor divides the boardwalk crowds confined to land, demands the shucking of so many buckets of mussels and steamers, sweet corn roasted on oil-drum fires, consumes all the candy- and caramel-coated apples hawked by women walking carts back and forth, and so thoroughly strips shops and stands of totems(图腾) to guard against a winter's worth of curses: flip-flops, boogie boards, pinwheels and Frisbees, crabs in wire cages, shells children must have painted. And one raving old man is driven to scan his metal detector across the sand, gauge(测量,估计) headphones' hissing transmissions, scoop bottle caps in a sifter. How amusing we must seem, sprouting full-grown from his head— surfers in wet suits saddling the chop, circling his shoulders with sea grass, shock cords, the seeds of strange ideas seized in our beaks. Until the wake we scratch through muddied sets severs connections, and we disappear behind darker swells, mount, descend, and rise again. |